Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hardbag> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 items per page.
- Hardbag abstract "Hardbag was a genre of electronic dance music popular in the mid-1990s. Having evolved out of the handbag house scene in 1993-1994, the genre enjoyed massive, albeit brief, popularity, with several hardbag releases achieving positions in the upper echelons of the UK chart. It was at the time sometimes confused with Nu-NRG, yet the styles were discernibly different."Don't You Want Me" by Felix is largely considered to be the track that launched the hardbag explosion. Produced by Rollo Armstrong of Faithless, Red Jerry and Felix, "Don't You Want Me" was released in 1992, scoring a Top 10 placing on the UK singles chart.The popularity of the hardbag genre reached its zenith in 1995 with releases by Candy Girls, Rollo & Sister Bliss and Mrs Wood all crossing over into the mainstream. Indeed, the sound began to meld with happy hardcore, evident on tracks such as "Forever young" by Interactive and "Rainbow Islands"- Seb.The two most influential exponents of the sound were Dutch producer Patrick Prins (who, recording a variety of aliases, scored several large UK club and chart hits such as "Bits + pieces" - Artemesia) and the late Tony De Vit, whose hardbag composition "Burning Up" is still considered one of the definitive examples of the genre. Another great presence in the hardbag scene was Red Jerry, former head of Hooj Choons. Other influential producers include Sister Bliss and Paul Masterson, the latter of whom diversified hardbag remixes to incorporate hi-nrg elementsBy early 1997 the hardbag craze had died down, and the sound began involving into what was to eventually become UK hard house. Labels such as Tripoli Trax expounded this sound via releases such as "Bells of revolution" by Lemon 8 and "Raise your hands" by Knuckleheadz.".
- Hardbag stylisticOrigin Diva_house.
- Hardbag stylisticOrigin Electronic_dance_music.
- Hardbag stylisticOrigin Hi-NRG.
- Hardbag wikiPageID "9520247".
- Hardbag wikiPageRevisionID "587557364".
- Hardbag bgcolor "silver".
- Hardbag color "black".
- Hardbag culturalOrigins "1990.0".
- Hardbag hasPhotoCollection Hardbag.
- Hardbag name "Hardbag".
- Hardbag popularity "Small; UK dance scene".
- Hardbag stylisticOrigins Diva_house.
- Hardbag stylisticOrigins Electronic_dance_music.
- Hardbag stylisticOrigins Hi-NRG.
- Hardbag subject Category:Electronic_music_genres.
- Hardbag type Abstraction100002137.
- Hardbag type AuditoryCommunication107109019.
- Hardbag type Communication100033020.
- Hardbag type ElectronicMusicGenres.
- Hardbag type ExpressiveStyle107066659.
- Hardbag type Music107020895.
- Hardbag type MusicGenre107071942.
- Hardbag type Genre.
- Hardbag type MusicGenre.
- Hardbag type TopicalConcept.
- Hardbag type MusicalComposition.
- Hardbag type Concept.
- Hardbag comment "Hardbag was a genre of electronic dance music popular in the mid-1990s. Having evolved out of the handbag house scene in 1993-1994, the genre enjoyed massive, albeit brief, popularity, with several hardbag releases achieving positions in the upper echelons of the UK chart. It was at the time sometimes confused with Nu-NRG, yet the styles were discernibly different."Don't You Want Me" by Felix is largely considered to be the track that launched the hardbag explosion.".
- Hardbag label "Hardbag".
- Hardbag sameAs m.02phmtr.
- Hardbag sameAs Q5655695.
- Hardbag sameAs Q5655695.
- Hardbag sameAs Hardbag.
- Hardbag wasDerivedFrom Hardbag?oldid=587557364.
- Hardbag isPrimaryTopicOf Hardbag.
- Hardbag name "Hardbag".